coCdlIntfEntry |
.1.3.6.1.4.1.9.10.88.1.1.1.1 |
An entry in the CDL Interface Table, providing objects to
configure and monitor CDL on an Ethernet interface.
An entry exists for each CDL capable Ethernet interface.
|
coCdlDefectIndNotifyEnable |
.1.3.6.1.4.1.9.10.88.1.1.2 |
This object indicates whether a change in the received CDL
Defect Indications, including the implicit end-to-end path
defect indication as well as the CDL defect indication bits in
the CDL OAM field, causes a notification to be generated.
disabled: Received CDL aggregate defect indication bit changes
do not cause coCdlRxAggDefectIndChange notifications to be
generated, and CDL flow defect indication changes from the
CDL network at path terminating interfaces do not cause
coCdlFromCdlNetFlowDIChange notifications to be generated.
enabledAtTerminatingInterfaces: A coCdlRxAggDefectIndChange
notification is generated whenever
- the received hop-by-hop forward defect indication (FDI-H)
or the received hop-by-hop backward defect indication bit
(BDI-H) changes at a hop terminating interface, or
- the received end-to-end (aggregate path) defect
indication bit (FDI-E) changes at an aggregate path
terminating interface.
A coCdlFromCdlNetFlowDIChange notification is generated
whenever a CDL flow defect indication, i.e. implicit
end-to-end path forward defect indication or end-to-end
path backward defect indication bit, from the CDL network
changes at a path terminating interface.
enabledAtAllInterfaces: a coCdlRxAggDefectIndChange
notification is generated whenever a received CDL aggregate
defect indication bit changes on any interface, and a
coCdlFromCdlNetFlowDIChange notification is generated
whenever a CDL flow defect indication, i.e. implicit
end-to-end path forward defect indication or end-to-end
path backward defect indication bit, from the CDL network
changes at a path terminating interface.
To minimize the probability of prematurely reacting to
momentary signal variations, a soak time may be incorporated
into the notification in the following manner. A notification
is generated after a defect is first detected, when the defect
persists for a period of time that exceeds the set soak
interval specified by coCdlDefectIndSetSoakInterval. A
notification is generated after a defect stops being detected,
when the defect does not appear over a period of time that
exceeds the clear soak interval specified by
coCdlDefectIndClearSoakInterval.
When changes in CDL defect indications are received for
multiple interfaces within a short time span, notifications
should be deferred so that each notification is generated at
least one coCdlDINotifyThrottleInterval after the previous
notification.
|
coCdlDefectIndSetSoakInterval |
.1.3.6.1.4.1.9.10.88.1.1.3 |
To minimize the probability of prematurely reacting to
momentary signal variations, a soak time may be incorporated
into the defect indications. The indication is set when the
defect persists for a period of time that exceeds the set soak
interval.
|
coCdlDefectIndClearSoakInterval |
.1.3.6.1.4.1.9.10.88.1.1.4 |
To minimize the probability of prematurely reacting to
momentary signal variations, a soak time may be incorporated
into the defect indications. The indication is cleared when no
defect occurs over a period of time that exceeds the clear soak
interval.
|
coCdlDINotifyThrottleInterval |
.1.3.6.1.4.1.9.10.88.1.1.5 |
The minimum time interval between generation of successive
CDL defect indication 'notification-events' by this agent. A
'notification-event' is the transmission of a single trap or
inform PDU to a list of notification destinations.
If more than one change occurs within a short time span, for
for example if hop-by-hop forward defect indications are
received for multiple interfaces, then notification-events
for these changes should be deferred by the agent so that each
notification-event occurs at least one throttle interval after
the previous notification-event. At the end of each throttle
interval, one notification-event should be generated if the
current defect indication state on any interface is different
from the last state indicated in a notification-event. In such
a case, another throttle interval is started immediately.
|
coCdlFlowTermEntry |
.1.3.6.1.4.1.9.10.88.1.2.1.1 |
An entry that contains objects used to manage a logical or
physical interface representing a single elementary packet
stream at the point where the CDL path defect indications are
terminated. Typically, this is a point where the CDL Ethernet
encapsulation is applied and removed. This can also be a point
between a part of the CDL network that supports
packet-by-packet multiplexing, and a part of the CDL network
that does not support packet-by-packet multiplexing.
This interface may have ifType value other than
'ethernetCsmacd', if traffic from a non-Ethernet protocol is
received on this interface and then encapsulated (or otherwise
interworked) in Ethernet and then CDL, before being progressed
into the CDL network.
|
coCdlAdminStatus |
.1.3.6.1.4.1.9.10.88.1.1.1.1.1 |
Enables/disables CDL on this interface.
When this object is set to 'true', CDL is enabled on
this interface. When this object is set to 'false',
CDL is disabled on this interface.
When CDL is enabled, the following actions are taken:
1) When a non-CDL packet is progressed to this interface for
transmission, the Ethernet packet is modified to carry the
CDL header. Similarly, when a received packet is progressed
from this interface to a non-CDL interface, the CDL header
is removed from the Ethernet packet.
2) Processing of CDL defect indications is activated.
3) The CDL Message Channel used to carry control (e.g. routing,
signalling) and management traffic is activated. The SNMP
agent creates an interface that represents the CDL Message
Channel. The interface representing the CDL Message Channel
is shown as a higher layer interface, with ifType
'propPointToPointSerial', residing above this CDL enabled
interface in the ifStackTable in the IF-MIB.
4) The CDL APS Channel is activated, if supported and APS is
configured for this interface.
5) Transport of multiple data flows (i.e. packet-by-packet
multiplexing) is activated, if this capability is supported
on this interface.
When CDL is disabled, only traditional (non-CDL) Ethernet
packets are transported, all packets on this interface are
treated as one Ethernet data flow, and the interface
representing the CDL message channel is deleted.
|
coCdlForceEndOfHop |
.1.3.6.1.4.1.9.10.88.1.1.1.1.2 |
When set to 'true', this object forces CDL Hop Terminating
behavior at this interface. A CDL Hop Terminating Network
Element terminates (generates in one direction and consumes in
another direction) hop-by-hop CDL Defect Indications at an
interface.
When this object is set to 'false', this network element may
still act as a CDL Hop Terminating Network Element at this
interface, if either
1) Automatic Protection Switching (APS) has been configured for
this interface, or
2) this network element is an Aggregate Path Terminating
Network Element at this interface.
It is recommended to force CDL Hop Terminating behavior at
administrative boundaries. This ensures that the hop-by-hop
CDL Defect Indications (FDI-H and BDI-H) between two
administrative domains reflect only errors that occur between
the domains, even if APS is not configured for this interface.
|
coCdlNodeBehavior |
.1.3.6.1.4.1.9.10.88.1.1.1.1.3 |
This object indicates the current CDL defect indication
behavior of this network element, at this interface. A network
element can take on one of three roles at a CDL enabled
interface: Aggregate Path Terminating Network Element
(endOfAggPath), Hop Terminating Network Element (endOfHop), or
CDL Regenerator.
|
coCdlRxAggDefectIndCurrStatus |
.1.3.6.1.4.1.9.10.88.1.1.1.1.4 |
This object reflects the current status of the CDL Defect
Indication bits received on this interface.
|
coCdlRxAggDefectIndLastChange |
.1.3.6.1.4.1.9.10.88.1.1.1.1.5 |
This object specifies the value of sysUpTime at the last time
there was a change in the value of
coCdlRxAggDefectIndCurrStatus.
|
coCdlTxAggDefectIndCurrStatus |
.1.3.6.1.4.1.9.10.88.1.1.1.1.6 |
This object reflects the current status of the CDL Defect
Indication bits transmitted on this interface.
|
coCdlTxAggDefectIndLastChange |
.1.3.6.1.4.1.9.10.88.1.1.1.1.7 |
This object specifies the value of sysUpTime at the last time
there was a change in the value of
coCdlTxAggDefectIndCurrStatus.
|
coCdlTransmitMaxFlowIdentifier |
.1.3.6.1.4.1.9.10.88.1.1.1.1.8 |
A CDL enabled interface can aggregate packet streams
(called elementary packet streams) from multiple interfaces.
CDL uses one or two octets to identify the elementary packet
stream that this packet belongs to (called the flow identifier).
This object identifies the maximum value that can be assigned
to the CDL flow identifier for a packet transmitted on this
interface.
|
coCdlReceiveMaxFlowIdentifier |
.1.3.6.1.4.1.9.10.88.1.1.1.1.9 |
A CDL enabled interface can aggregate packet streams
(called elementary packet streams) from multiple interfaces.
CDL uses one or two octets to identify the elementary packet
stream that this packet belongs to (called the flow identifier).
This object identifies the maximum value that can be assigned
to the CDL flow identifier for a packet received on this
interface.
|
coCdlRxHeaderCRCError |
.1.3.6.1.4.1.9.10.88.1.1.1.1.10 |
The number of CDL frames received with CDL Header CRC errors.
This object represents the lower word value of the counter
associated with the number of CDL header CRC errors
encountered in the receive direction.
NOTE: The object coCdlRxHeaderCRCErrorOverflow contains the
higher 32 bits of this counter value. SNMP v2c or v3 managers
can use the coCdlHCRxHeaderCRCError object directly which is a
64 bit counter.
|
coCdlRxHeaderCRCErrorOverflow |
.1.3.6.1.4.1.9.10.88.1.1.1.1.11 |
This object represents the higher word value of the counter
associated with the number of CDL Header CRC errors
encountered in the receive direction.
NOTE: The object coCdlRxHecError contains the lower 32 bits of
this counter value. If the error count is greater than
4,294,967,295, the higher word value will be stored in this
object. SNMP v2c or v3 managers can use the
coCdlHCRxHeaderCRCError object directly which is a 64 bit
counter.
|
coCdlHCRxHeaderCRCError |
.1.3.6.1.4.1.9.10.88.1.1.1.1.12 |
The number of CDL frames received with CDL Header CRC errors.
This is a High Capacity (64 bit) version of the
coCdlRxHeaderCRCError counter.
|
coCdlRxInvalidFlowID |
.1.3.6.1.4.1.9.10.88.1.1.1.1.13 |
This object counts the number of CDL Flow Identifier lookup
errors in the receive direction. When a CDL interface
multiplexes/demultiplexes more than one elementary packet
stream, it uses the flow identifier in the CDL header. This
error counter is incremented when a flow identifier value
received on this interface does not map to any of the
elementary packet streams demultiplexed by this interface.
This object represents the lower word value of the counter
associated with the number of CDL Flow Identifier lookup errors
encountered in the receive direction.
NOTE: The object coCdlRxInvalidFlowIDOverflow contains the
higher 32 bits of this counter value. SNMP v2c or v3 managers
can use the coCdlHCRxInvalidFlowID object directly which is a
64 bit counter.
|
coCdlRxInvalidFlowIDOverflow |
.1.3.6.1.4.1.9.10.88.1.1.1.1.14 |
This object represents the higher word value of the counter
associated with the number of CDL Flow Identifier lookup errors
encountered in the receive direction.
NOTE: The object coCdlRxInvalidFlowID contains the lower 32
bits of this counter value. If the error count is greater than
4,294,967,295, the higher word value will be stored in this
object. SNMP v2c or v3 managers can use the
coCdlHCRxInvalidFlowID object directly which is a 64 bit
counter.
|
coCdlHCRxInvalidFlowID |
.1.3.6.1.4.1.9.10.88.1.1.1.1.15 |
This object counts the number of CDL Flow Identifier lookup
errors in the receive direction. When a CDL interface
multiplexes/demultiplexes more than one elementary packet
stream, it uses the flow identifier in the CDL header. This
error counter is incremented when a flow identifier value
received on this interface does not map to any of the
elementary packet streams demultiplexed by this interface.
This is a High Capacity (64 bit) version of the
coCdlRxInvalidFlowID counter.
|
coCdlRxNonCdlPackets |
.1.3.6.1.4.1.9.10.88.1.1.1.1.16 |
This object counts the number of packets received without
a CDL header on this interface. This counter is
incremented only when CDL is enabled on this interface.
This object represents the lower word value of the counter
associated with the number of packets received without a CDL
header on this interface.
NOTE: The object coCdlRxNonCdlPacketsOverflow contains the
higher 32 bits of this counter value. SNMP v2c or v3 managers
can use the coCdlHCRxNonCdlPackets object directly which is a
64 bit counter.
|
coCdlRxNonCdlPacketsOverflow |
.1.3.6.1.4.1.9.10.88.1.1.1.1.17 |
This object represents the higher word value of the counter
associated with the number of packets received without a CDL
header on this interface.
NOTE: The object coCdlRxNonCdlPackets contains the lower 32
bits of this counter value. If the error count is greater than
4,294,967,295, the higher word value will be stored in this
object. SNMP v2c or v3 managers can use the
coCdlHCRxNonCdlPackets object directly which is a 64 bit
counter.
|
coCdlHCRxNonCdlPackets |
.1.3.6.1.4.1.9.10.88.1.1.1.1.18 |
This object counts the number of packets received without
a CDL header on this interface. This counter is
incremented only when CDL is enabled on this interface.
This is a High Capacity (64 bit) version of the
coCdlRxNonCdlPackets counter.
|
coCdlFromCdlNetFlowIdentifier |
.1.3.6.1.4.1.9.10.88.1.2.1.1.1 |
This object specifies the flow identifier value received from
the CDL network that identifies this elementary packet stream
at this interface.
Note that if CDL is not enabled on this interface, this
represents the flow identifier value passed to this interface
from the cross connect fabric. If the cross connect fabric
does not map the flow identifier value for this elementary
packet stream, this is the value passed from the CDL
aggregation interface on the other side of the cross connect.
|
coCdlToCdlNetFlowIdentifier |
.1.3.6.1.4.1.9.10.88.1.2.1.1.2 |
This object specifies the flow identifier value set in CDL
packets in this elementary packet stream that are progressed
from this interface towards the CDL network.
Note that if CDL is not enabled on this interface, this
represents the flow identifier value passed to the fabric
that cross connects this packet stream onto a CDL aggregation
interface.
|
coCdlFromCdlNetFlowDICurrStatus |
.1.3.6.1.4.1.9.10.88.1.2.1.1.3 |
This object reflects the current status of the CDL flow defect
indications received from the CDL network, at this interface.
Note that the end-to-end path forward defect indication is
implicit, i.e. it is not signalled using a bit. An end-to-end
path forward defect is inferred when no CDL Ethernet or Idle
packets are received with the flow identifier value specified
by coCdlFromCdlNetFlowIdentifier, over a pre-determined length
of time.
|
coCdlFromCdlNetFlowDILastChange |
.1.3.6.1.4.1.9.10.88.1.2.1.1.4 |
This object specifies the value of sysUpTime at the last time
there was a change in the value of
coCdlFromCdlNetFlowDICurrStatus.
|
coCdlToCdlNetFlowDICurrStatus |
.1.3.6.1.4.1.9.10.88.1.2.1.1.5 |
This object reflects the current status of the CDL flow defect
indications progressed towards the CDL network from this
interface.
Note that the end-to-end path forward defect indication is
implicit, i.e. it is not signalled using a bit. An end-to-end
path forward defect is indicated by stopping transmission of
CDL Ethernet and Idle packets with the flow identifier value
specified by coCdlToCdlNetFlowIdentifier.
|
coCdlToCdlNetFlowDILastChange |
.1.3.6.1.4.1.9.10.88.1.2.1.1.6 |
This object specifies the value of sysUpTime at the last time
there was a change in the value of
coCdlToCdlNetFlowDICurrStatus.
|